JULY 2014 now joins January 2009 as a month when war between Israel and Hamas caused anti-Semitism to spew forth across Britain.

The CST is worried about rising anti-Semitism as a result of the Gaza conflict[GETTY/PH]

If this latest round of Middle East violence has now ended, then we may expect the anti-Semitism to gradually diminish: but this hatred has again been revealed, even if most of the time it lies beneath the surface.

Are British Jews (and those elsewhere) to be forever held hostage to a seemingly intractable conflict in which totalitarian Jihadists are sworn to destroy Israel at whatever cost?

Members of the public expressing fears and concerns to Community Security Trust (CST) have referenced this in different ways.

One said she felt “stuck in a swamp“.

Another said that the hatred had come from “ordinary people, not what or who we expect it from…it’s the underlying anti-Semitism, and now that they’ve put it out there, how are we supposed to put it back?“.

It may sound trite to speak of Jews de-friending others on Facebook, but anecdotally this seems to be happening again and again, with Jews deeply upset by what this conflict has revealed about those whom they believed to be their friends (in all meanings of the word).

Bare statistics do not–cannot–explain the emotion many are feeling right now.

But they are stark.

CST has now recorded over 200 anti-Semitic incidents for July 2014, making it very clearly the second worst month we have seen since our records began in 1984.

The worst was January 2009 when 288 incidents were recorded. The second worst was February 2009, with 114 incidents.

The July 2014 total is not yet finalised, because it takes time to properly analyse and categorise all of the reports reaching us from throughout Britain right now, so the figure of 200 is an absolute minimum.

Of course, anti-Semitic incidents occur every day, week and month of the year.

CST recorded 304 between January and June 2014, a rise of 36 per cent from 2013.

A pro-Palestinian supporter at a mass protest outside Israel's embassy in London [PA]

We now have over 200 in one month, so the maths are clear.

Not every July incident relates to the Israel-Hamas conflict, but the majority do.

Without listing every one of them, it is almost impossible to convey the scale and the impact of the invective, but each and every incident involves at least one victim and at least one perpetrator.

They come randomly at Jews and Jewish locations throughout the country.

Many of them appear to be perpetrated by Muslim youths and adults, but by no means all.

That this racism is perpetrated in the name of human rights - for Palestinians - is bizarre, but nothing new: although it does help explain the deafening silence from the self-titled anti-racism movement (Hope not Hate does not fit this category and is a strong exception.)

The hatred is showing clear trends.

Shouting “Free Gaza” on a pro-Palestinian demonstration is not anti-Semitic, but obviously is when yelled at a random Jew in the street, or when daubed on a synagogue wall.

The same goes for screams of “child murderer”, shouted at Jews or pinned on a synagogue.

Then there is the ever-present anti-Semitic fixation with Nazism.

This comes two ways: Jews being told that they are the new Nazis, or Jews being told that “Hitler was right”, a phrase that trended on Twitter.

Child murderer has a long history in anti-Semitism, almost 2,000 years longer than Nazism does.

The accusation of Jews having killed Jesus, the embodiment of innocence, moved into medieval blood libels.

Some Jews perceive sections of the UK media as having focused to such an extent upon Gazan child victims in this latest conflict that it somehow indicates that these blood libels still lurk somewhere deep.

Others would counter that this kind of ‘unconscious antisemitism’ argument is ridiculous and that the media could not focus upon dead and injured children if they did not actually exist, nor in such numbers.

The fact remains: British Jews are being called child-murderers.

The Nazi slanders and threats are not in mainstream media, but the question ‘why didn’t Jews/Israel learn the lessons of the Holocaust?’ has been.

This is surely repellent to the overwhelming majority of Jews.

Thousands of protesters marched through Whitehall in central London last month [PA]

It comes posed as a question, but really it is a demand.

Whatever its motivation, it smells of Jew-Israel-Nazi equivalence and ‘we are holier than thou’.

The super-heated arguments of how the media covers Israel are not strictly CST’s business; and neither are boycotts of Israel.

Nevertheless, it is impossible to discuss how Jews feel right now without noting how both things impact upon anti-Semitism, upon how Jews are perceived and how Jews themselves feel.

One need not be a dyed in the wool defender of Israel, nor even a Zionist, to suspect that no other country on earth appears to evoke such passion and hatred.

We need not cite Syria right now, nor Sri Lanka in 2009, because Britain itself has killed civilians in the Middle East in recent years, children included.

Yet it is only one section of British society that is called “child-murderers”, or “Nazis”, or is told that Hitler should have wiped them all out.

Less rhetorically, we must note that anti-Semitic incidents will subside along with the images on people’s television screens, but the long term damage to Jews of anti-Israel boycotts will persist.

Dry statistics help us to measure the raw impact of this.

If someone engages in “criticism of Israel” then 6 per cent of British Jews consider that person “definitely anti-Semitic” and 27 per cent answer “probably anti-Semitic”.

If that person supports a boycott of Israel, then 34 per cent of British Jews consider them “definitely anti-Semitic” and 33 per cent “probably anti-Semitic”.

So, the boycott of Israel is a tipping point for most Jews in regarding criticism as being anti-Semitic or not.

One consequence of this latest Israel-Hamas war will be a lot more boycotts, either through choice (such as trade unions and cultural venues) or through intimidation (such as commercial outlets).

Just as Israel is being singled out for scrutiny and boycott, so many Jews are going to feel the same way.

When the Jewish Film Festival is given a ‘ditch your Israeli Embassy link’ ultimatum by the Tricycle Theatre in Kilburn, it betrays how British Jews’ connections to Israel are the measure by which others judge them.

The same applies to the National Union of Students decision to boycott Israel, which promises no end of trouble and intimidation for Jewish students.

Then there are the mass intimidations of supermarkets that dare to sell Israeli goods, some of which have actually been forced to briefly stop trading as a result.

Finally, one anti-Semitic incident out of more than two hundred gives the merest hint of recent events.

It speaks volumes of how Jews risk being expected to behave: and the reactions they risk upon refusal.

A Street in Bradford, evening of July 26: A Jewish man and his wife were driving when they became caught in slow moving traffic due to an accident up the road.

Every car in the queue was being stopped by a group of apparently Muslim men and women, carrying buckets and asking for money for Gaza.